........Tii - " . " ' .... . . j. . r - ' ,...-- '' ( I
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Friday Morning, July 23, 1920.
THE WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL
NINE
UP
ECONOMY
EVENT
I J p5?v
J 1 0 )
Mi m
foj ECONOMY
-M EVENT
Now Comes the Season's Greatest Economy Event-July Business Building Values
You Want to Practice Economy Spend Your Monty at Efird's Economy Sale
V
Big Waist
Values
Beautiful lot of Georgette, Pongee,
Crepe de Chine Waists in all the
new shades. Regular
$4.00 values for
Ill Mil
$1.98
Georgette
up-to-date
$2.98
25 doz. Silk Embroidered Tricolette
Blouses, regular $5.00 sellers,
beautiful assortment of d0 AO
colors to select from .... p0
Big lot ladies $5.00
Waists in the newest
styles. All sizes and
colors
Gingham
Dresses
Ladies' and Junior Dresses, made
of Renfrew fadeless Gingham.
Specially priced at
$2.98 and $3.98
One lot of ladies' good quality'
Gingham dresses, long as t.hey last
$1.48 and $198
$12.50 Voile Dresses
$5.98
Big assortment in this lot to select
from. All of fine quality figured
Voiles in all the wanted colors.
25 Dozen Sample Waists in
Voiles, Organdies, etc.,
real $2.00 values
$1.48
$32.50 and $39.59
Dresses
$16.50
A Big Dress Reduction
A wonderful collection of
high grade dresses, Georg
ette, Crepe de Chine, Taf
fetas, etc., presenting styles
and values you will imme
diately recognize as most
extraordinary.
R09S
Jr
ECONOMY EVENT
$25 and $30 Dresses
$14.50
These charming dresses
have been taken from our
regular stock and grouped
at this single price for
clearance. The dresses are
in this season's models, of
Georgette, Crepe de Chine,
Taffeta, etc.
Crepe
Kimonas
A delayed shipment of
pretty Crepe Kimonos just
received. They come in
plain and fancy colors. The
entire lot has been spe
cially priced for this sale at
$1.98, $2.98, $3.98
$19.50 Silk Dresses
$10.98
Plain and figured Georg
ette Dresses, all the latest
of the summer styles and
the most attractive models
are in this sale.
$9.75
the Reduced Price on
These Summertime Frocks,
The original prices wrere
$15.00. This season's
models nicely made of
good quality Organdie and
Dotted Swiss.
l
J
SENATOR H ARING ACCEPTS
REPUBLICAN NOMINATION
(continued from page .)
our freedom of action and gives to
a military alliance the right to pro
claim America's duty to the wld. No
surrender of rights to a world counclj
or its military aUiance, no assumed
mandatary however appealing, ever
shall summon the sons of this re
public to war. Their supreme sac
rifice shall only he asked for America
and its call of honor. There is a
sanctity in that right we will not
delegate. . ..
When the compact was being writ
ten 1 do not know whether Europe
asked or ambition insistently bestow
,d It was so good to rejoice in the
world s confidence in our unselfishness
that I can believe our evident disin
terestedness inspired Europe's wish
for our association, quite as much as
the selfish thought of enlisting Amen
can imwer and resources. Ours is an
outstanding, influential example to the
world whether we cloak it in spoken
modesty or magnify it in exaltation.
We want to help; we mean to help;
but we hold to our own interpreta
tion of the American conscience as
.ho verv foul of our nationality.
Disposed as we are. the way is
very simple. Let the failure attend
ing assumption, obstinacy, impractic
ability and delay be recognized, and
let us find the big, practical, unsel
fish way to do our part, neither covet
ous because of ambition nor hesitant
through fear, hut ready ro serve our
selves, humanity and God. With a
senate advising as the constitution
contemplates, I would hopefully ap
proach the nations of Europe and of
the earth, proposing that understand
ing which makes us a willing partici
pant in the consecration of nations
tn a new relationship, to commit the
moral forces of the world. America
Included, to peace and international
justice, still leaving America includ
ed, to peace and international Justice,
still leaving America free, indepen
dent and self-reliant, but offering
friendship to all the world.
If men call for more specific de
tails, I remind them that moral com
mittals' are broad and all inclusive,
and we are contemplating peoples In
the Concord of humanity's advance
ment. From our own viewpoint the
program is specifically American and
we mean to be Americans first, to
all the world.
Appraising preserved nationality as
the first essential to the continued pro
gress of the republic, there is linked
with It the supreme necessity of the
restoration let us say the re-reveal-mont
of the constitution, and our re
construction a an industrial nation.
Here Is the transcendingMask. It con
cerns our common weal at home and
will decide our future eminence In the
world. More than these, this repub
lic constitutional liberties, has
given to mankind the most fortunate
conditions for human activity and at
tainment the world has ever noted,
and we are today the world's reserve
force in the grent contest for liberty
Through serunty. and maintained
equality of opportunity and Its righte
ous rewards.
It is folly to close iiur eye to out
standing farts. Humanity is restive
much of the world Is in revolution,
the agents of discord and destruction
have wrought their tragedy in psthetir
Russia. have lighted their torches
among other peoples, and hope to see
America as a pnrt of the great Red
conflagration. Ours is the temple of
liberty under the law. and it is ours
to cnil the Sons of Opportunity to its
defense. America must not only save
herself, hut ours must be that ap
pealing voice tvi sober the yorld.
More than H else the present-day
world needs understanding. There can
be no peace save through composed
differences, and the submission of the
individual to the will and weal of
the many. Any other plan means
anarchy and Its rule of force.
It must be understood that toil
alone makes for accomplishment and
advancement, and righteous posses
sion is the reward of toll, and its
Incentive. There is no progress ex
cept in the stimulus of competition.
When competition natural, fair, im
pelling competition is suppressed,
whether by law, compact or conspi
racy, we halt the march of progress,
silence the voice of aspiration, and
paralyse the will for achievement.
These are but common sense truths
uf human development.
The chief trouble today I, vhat
the world war wrought the destruc
tion of healthful competition, left
our storehouses empty, and there Is
a minimum production when our
need is maximum. Maximums, not
minimums, is the call of America. It
Isn't a new story, because war never
fails to leave depleted storehouses
and always Impairs the efficiency of
production. War also establishes Its
higher standards for wages, and they
abide. I wish the higher wage to
abide, on one explicit condition
that the wage-earner will give full
return for the wage received. H Is
dustrial life. They are less In fact
than they were before organization
and grouping on either lde revealed
the inequalities, and conscience hat
wrought more Justice than statutes
have compelled, but the ferment of
the world rivets our thoughts on the
necessity of progressive solution
else our generation will suffer the
experiment which means chaos for
our day to reestablish God's plan for
the great tomorrow.
Speaking our sympathies, utterln
the conscience of all the people,
mindful of our right to dwell amid
the good fortunes of rational, con-science-Mnpelled
adva noenient, we
hold the majesty of righteous gov
ernment, with liberty under the law,
to be our avoidance of chaos, ami we
call upon every citizen of the -republic
to hold fast to that which
made us what we are, and we will
have ordrtrly government safeguard
the onward inarch to .all wu ought
to be.
The menacing tendency of the
present day is not chargeable wholly
to the unsettled and fevered condi
tions caused by the war. The mani
fest weakness In popular government
Ilea in the temptation to appeal to
grouped citizenship for political ad
vantage. There is no grearer peril
The constitution contemplates no
class arid recognizes no group. It
the best assurance we can have lorinr,,"lly includes all the people, with
a reduced cost of living. Mark ou I "Pectf i.: recognition for none, and
1 am ready to acclaim the nigh.-st!,h hihet consec.ra.Uon we can
standard of pay, but I would be blind i make today Is a committal of the
to the responsibilities that mark this 1 Republican party to that savin con
fateful hour if 1 did not caution t ho ! stitutiona lism which contemplates
wage-earners of America that mount-i11 America as one people, and holds
ing waes and decreased pr ldu-tlon i government free from Influence
can lead only to Industrial and on tlw one hand and unmoved bv
economic ruin. intimidation on 'he other.
1 u-.nl tr. nn.l t .v,o 't woum to ini uimunen in lony
sons and daughters of the republic,
to every producer, to join hand and
brain In production, more produc
tion, honest production, patriotic
production, because patriotic pro
duction IS no less a defense of out
best civilization than that of armed
to ignore the activities in our own
countrry which are aimed to desiro
our economic system, and to com
mit us to the colossal tragedy
which has both destroyed all freedom
and nutde Russia impotent. This
movement is not to be halted in
force. Profiteering is a crime of "rn"la mu "'"
mmmininn n nrter-nrnri option i. - abridge the freedom f speech, the
. , , - . . frpodnm nf nreas Or the freedom of
assembly. because there is no
We must i Promise in repression. These llber
rformalcy , ties are as sacred as the freedom
oi niKiuiin ornri, an 1 11 v i, im me nq
crime of omission. We must work
our moat and best, else the destruc
tive reaction will come,
stabilize and strive for
else the inevitable reaction will
bring its train of sufferings, rilsap- ,n rights of life and the pursuit of
pointments and reversals. We want I happiness. Wle do hold to the right
to forestall guch reaction, we want I to crush sedition, to stifle a
to hold all advanced groun.l, and I menacing contempt for law. to stamp
fortify It with general good-fortune. J"'" a peril to the safety of the re
Let us return for a moment to public or Its people, when emergency
the necessity for understanding, par-1 calls, because security and the
tlcularty that understanding which ! majesty of the law are the first
concerns ourselves at home, I decline , essent In Is nf liberty. He who threat
to recognize any conflict of Interest nos destruction of the government
among the pTrtioipants in industry ! by forte or flaunts his contempt for
The destruction of one Is the ruin of; lawful authority, ceases to be a loyal
the other, the suspicion or rebellion ' citizen and forefelta his rights to
nf one unavoidably involves the oth- j the freedom of the republic,
er. In conflict Is disaster, in udder- Let it he said to all America thnt
standing there is triumph. Thre is our plan of popular government con
no issue relating to the foundation on , templates such orderly changes as the
w hich industry is huilded, because In- i crystallized Intelligence of the major
dustry is bigger than any element ' Ity of our people think best. There can
in Its modern making. But the In- I be no modification of this underlying
slstent eall is for labor, management ; rule, but no majority shall abridge the
and capital to reach understanding.
The human element comes first.
rights of a minority. Men have
right to question our system in full-
snd I want the employers In Indus-I est freedom, but they must always
try to understand the asplrayons, the I remember that the rights nf freedom
convictions, the yearnings of the Impose the obligations which main
millions of American wage-earners, . tain it. Our policy is not of repies
and I want the wage-earners to -non. hut we make appeal today to
understand the problems, the anxle- i American Intelligence and patriotism,
ties, the obligations of management when the republic Is menaced from
and capital, and all of them must I within. Just as we trusted American
understand their relationship to the j patriotism when our rights were
people and their obligation to the ; threatened from without,
republic. Out of this understanding! wv call on all America for steadl
wlll come he unanimous committal ness. so that we may proceed dellber
to economic Justice, and in economic atPiv to the readtustment which rnn-Jiistlc.-
lies that social Justice which , rPrn8 u tne people. Our partv plat
is the- highest essential to human form fairly expresses the conscience
happiness.
I am speaking as on" who
"ounted the contents of the pay en
of Republicans on industrial relations.
has No party Is Indifferent to the wel
fare of the wage-earner. To us his
velope from the vlewpoini of thp , good fortune is of deepest concern and
.earner a.9 well as the employer. No we seek to make that good fortune
me pretends to deny the inequalities i permanent. We do not oppose hut ap-
which are manifest In modern In-I prove collective bargaining, because
i j-j '."He-..1 .. en'H-. ..
' that Is an outstanding right, but we
are unalterably insistent that its ex
ercise must not destroy the equally
sacred right of the Individual, in his
necessary pursuit of livelihood. Any
American has the right to quit his
employment, so has every American
the right to seek employment. The
group must not endanger the lndui
iltiflil. and we must discourage groups
preying upon one another, and none
shall bo allowed to forget that gov
ernment's obligations are alike to all
the people.
I hope we may do more than merely
discourage the lohses and sufferings
attending indulsrial conflict. The
strike against the government is poor
ly denied, for government service In
volves none of the elements of profit
which relate to competitive enter
prise., There is progress, in the estab
lishment of nfficia.l revea.lmeni of
issues and conditions which lead to
conflict, so that unerring public sen
timent may speed the adjustment, but
I hope for that record of purpose,
not forced but inspired by the com
mon weal, whlrh will give a regulated
service the fullest guaranty of con
tinuity. I am Drinking of the rail
roads. In modern life they are the
very base of all our activities and In
fsreharges. For public protection we
have enacted laws providing lor a
regulation of the charge for service,
a limitation on the capital invested
and a limitation on capital's earnings.
There remains only competition of
service, on which to base our hopes
for an efficiency and expansion which
meet our modern requirements. The
railway workmen ought to be the
best paid and know the best work
ing conditions in the world. Theirs
Is an exceptional responsibility. They
are not only essentia! to the life and
health and all productive activities
of the people, but they urc l r t ly
responsible for the safety of travel
ing millions. The government which
his assumed so much authority for
the public good might well stamp
railway employment with the sanctity
of public 'service and guarantee to the
railway employees that lustlce which
vocet the American conception of.
righteousness on the one hand, and
assure, continuity of service on the
ot her.
The Importance of the railway
rehabilitation In so obvious that ref
erence seems uncalled for. We are
so confident that much of the present
day insufficiency and inefficiency of
transportation are due to the wither
ing hand of government operation
that we emphasize anew our opposi
tion to government ownership, we
ant to expedite the reparation, and
make sure the mistake is not repeat
ed. It is little use to recite the story
of development, exploitation, govern
! ment experiment and Its neglect,
government operation and its fail
ures. The inadequacy of trackage
and terminal facilities, the Insuf
ficiency of equipment and the in
Uffioiency of operation all bear the
j b'lghting stamp of governmental In
capacity during Kderal operation.
The work of rehabilitation under
.the restoration of private ownership
deserves our best eneouragemontl,
I Millions are needed In ' new equip
ment, not alone to meet the growing
demand for service, hut to restore
the extraordinary depreciation due
'to the strained service1 of war. With
i restricted earnings and with specu.
'nlatlve profits removed, railway
' activities have come to the realm of
coniervative and constructive serv
ice, and the government which Im
paired must play Its part In restora
tlon. Manifestly the returns must be
so gauged that necessary capital may
be enlisted, and we must foster as
well as restrain.
We have no more pressing prob
lem. A state of inadequate trans-
7 ' JU-UU. -"-JUS.-JJJl 1 wl I III .III. ., L-
alVA'n!,0 a,n,y cnare: I "n need the ' fullness of service t s.ntf.I and elemental fndustrv. and
'xDer ment ",!' vernmental yvhlch attends the exchange of pro- In both appreciation and interest w
experiment, is losing millions lo ducts. I,et us speak the Irrefutable pledge effective evnre-.ine. in i .nH
agriculture, It Is hindering industry, fi nth. hlch waeea and i-eriiirerf mm nractic. vv. ,. in h.,n .t..
It Is menacing the American people o living are jn utter contradiction ! alion which again will make proflt
with a fuel shortage little less than j unless we have the height of efllclen. aMe and desirable the ownership and
pciiiiion ot
comparatively small
with a fuel shortage little less than unless we have the height of eflh
.1 nerll It A m n h a .V... . .. , i
- J- ' "11'iinm.ro INI- MI-Kt-HI - 1 1 O I WICM rOCRIVCU.
....j ij.oniFMi arm suggests mat spirit; in all sincerity we promise the pie- farms intensively cultivated. and
oi encouragement and ass- nland vcnffrtri rr nnra.nnitli e rotltu ie
which commits all America to im. ehnllenne nrofltnerin,- uitl, nil
neve sucn an emergency. i moral force and the legal pou-i
i ne one compensation amid at
tending anxieties s our new and
needed realization of the vital part
transportation plays In the complex
ities or modern life. We are not to
think of rails alone, but highways
Irom farm to market, from railway
to farm, arteries of life-blood to
present -day life, the quickened ways
If. communication and exchange,
the answer of our people to Hie
motor age. We believe in generous
Federal co-operation in construction,
linked with assurances of mainte
nance that will put an end to crim
inal waste of public funds on the.
one hand and give a. guaranty of up
kept highways on the other.
Water transportation is in
separably linked with adequacy of
facilities, and we fnvoi- a .,
emlenre on the seas, the practical
th.
1-1 ot
government and people, hut it is fair.
nvt', l is llrnrlv. lo clvc reminder
which will facilitate the caring for
the products ot farm and orchard
without the lamentable waste under
present conditions.
mcrlcu would look with anilrty
... nun,
mat law is noi tiie sole corrective ol on the dlM-oiirimeniriit r r.rmi.'..
"..n.1 I- T IIMOUgll f,. JtoVCIII-
nioiH'n iicguvt , n iiarnljsis by
people foj
Mir economic ills.
l.ei us call io nil th.
: ...... iiim-iiirx .i Kt-iiubitran
sacrifice if need be. for a nation-wide iidiiiliilMnilion will ,c committed in
driv,. against extriivai-.-in. e and lux- renewed regard for iigr.riiliurr "iinil
nry. to a recommittal to simplicity seek the participation , taruu-rs m
or living, to that prudent and nor- luring ihe Ilia Justly complained of ind
inal plan of life which is Hie health aim to place th,. An., i i. f.,rm wt,.re
of the republic. There hasn't been if. ought in be- h.glily ranked in
a recovery rmin the waste and lib. i American activities and fully sharing
normalit les of war since the story nf the highest g,u! lorltinea of American
throiiirh work and saving,
Industry and denial, while
I h rough
edlcH"
He. mnlngly associated with thi i,h.
jeer are Ihe policies .,1 irr-i "... t w.r,
""" ne.-oi.-n- me policies ol Irrigation i. ,iH
spending ami heedless extravagance i e la ma t Ion, .so e..seii: nil to a (rrj, U , ur
have marked cverv rlec.lv in th.. hi. Ill cxitiin.i.Mn .v.- ..'
every
torv of nations Give the assurance
.1 that rugged simplicltv of Ameri
can lire whi.li marked the first cen-
lopment oi the rri.:,. j
o- ...... oioiei i in
West. It is our purpose to continue
and enlarge federal aid not in section-
development of Inlnnd waterways : '''' amazing development and this l partialis. i,,it f.- ,h(. ROO(j (
Ihe UP-bullding and co-ordination of U'"n"r!'"n" may '""'"rwrite a second America. We hold to that, harmony ,,f
n . .i . . ' i t ntury of surpass nir accomplish- relationship lir.i.v ,
Ml to make them nl to ., ........ ''. ntury of surpassing accomplish
for every call of developing anil ' r""nl-
widening American commerce. J- " '"' otepublicin party was founded
like lha.t recommittal to thought of ' ,,y "'""'rs. with the sensitive i nn
America first whlr h nl..,i,...o .h ! science born of their freedom and
in... simple ii -h. i nese i oi i ii nfriT
or the then
, , "'ii. inn nuniy iii
I'l'lUtmilHhlll Lll'IWfi.il .--..n....-.-
development, which fittingly appraises
our n.,i ura, r.-s..r. and makes them
available , dcwdnping America of to.
day. and Will holds ,., Ih conserving
thought for the America of the mor-
sioanu from th.- farms
Middle West our parly has never The federal grnernments relation
tailed in ils realization that acricul- 10 lamaimn and development is too
l.iri, iu due,,! , !, Hi, ll,n f,.,,n.lDi f imllOllnnl ... I, . .
; " , , ....oi. .,, u in pie tiidcus-
our very existence, HIl'l 11 nils eve
licen our policy, purpose and per
promot
inveigh. but that uvf.ua -.i
And it is far too serious to dismiss
with flaming hut futile promise.
Eight years ago in times of
peace, the Democratic party made
it an issue, and when clothed with
power that party came near to its
accomplishment by destroying the
pcupie h mparuy t nuy. Hut that!
, ...t I..,, Loan trie ailment
bus ever Al.ka, alone, is r It h in
nee i. , , " " """Blnation, and
needs only closer Unking, through the
lines of transportation, and a govern!
mental policy that i.o.h .
'and encourage, development, to speed
If to ii fnriH.im.1 ...,,.,1.1 -
'i,w 7 ,,wn,,,,n common
Th: rf, 'n """""hip "i r,o
Panama canal, an American creation
o the free use of American ship,
ping. It will add to the American
1 1 a wa kening.
One ran not speak of Industry and
commerce, and the transportation
.... .1,11,
ii ii nicy .ne. nepenrlent With- I r . .
cut an earnest thoucht of ,L ! ''""mance to protect and
abnormal cost of living and , . 'oM essential Industry.
problem- in Its wake I, ! I N, w conditions. which attend ,
... -.-. .' nm.i.im, vrr.it'11. t. .1 vl r r, rH n r i . mm 1'riCO iriiir. A a 1 ... .
his nnihino r: r r . .. . .. r " ""l,rni. 10 speed
mistrial development, can rnr a new'-' ...reiiioat position as a common
and forward-lookinc r.rnirrnm The Wealth, rugged In i-illinit.l.lr,
American farmer had a hundred and ln materialized resources
twenty millions to feed in the home These things 1 can nnlv
market, and heard the cry of the Within becoming limits one can" noi
world for food and answered It. say more. Indeed for the Dresenf
though he faced ti appalling task many questions of vast important-,
amid handicaps never encountered must be hastily passed reserving
,,Ff"r"- 'f,ll":r "iscusslon t auit'ahle occasion
It is easy to understand the ,'aik " "f '"c there -,ln" rP'n advance,.
causes after which ih. r,.,.i . . ..nr..- 11 hiiimiiikih in mn - ' nunei system, will
h , 7n to cfTeot hi. P m"Rt : ""r"" vit"o adding to their value '"feet a necessary, helpful reforma.
'rocs r n.n-.r hn fa'-'- '"" whlrh d" 'rf ,n an" rPV'" nuRn'" methods to
in ? hJ - f ,urrency a"" taxes and expenses without enhanr- Government business. " 10
i, , L Tn, Pr'r ,hP ,lnll;,r . log his returns. His helpers have I believe federal departments should
I st as expansion and inflation have' vlelded to the lure of shoo and cltv. h' made more business-like ..-2
. , a , ru"'S f ,h" wnr''1' "n,n- n"lin!" al"n. he has met nnd hack to productive effort thousands of
'e Inflated in haste, we must dr.. , h i.. k,n u,. ..i,. i..u... federal emnlnve.. h ;.w".or
(late In deliberation. We debaseS- ,.,,,.,. t..r- h, r. Pllcatini: work or .."...au:
the dr.llar In recWl
inns. rr'siore in nnnnu Tknru...i j-,... . ho .... r-
. ' .'.'"rt'i.'ii iuh'i'c oi Hrtinciai iitivph on prices to ... ... t,, ln. proiecilve tariff
.ni ...mi i em oral ion
tne urn-cent dollar on the other
we must do- borne the burden of the only insistent federal employees, who
We debased attempts to force down prices. ft P'l'ating work or not
I finance. We cV,.llnr.a knll, th. n,iinn, rk all.
ity. Defllatlon i lustier, of artificial drives on prices to 1 believe in the protective tariff
restoration of rr. a! that they were effective almost P"cy and know we will be calline
. oe iu.i-t eni nnuar on the other ought ; solely against his products In the "lr Mvlng Americanism again.
... n neaun on tne nay after the hands of the producer and never ef- ' oeueve in a great merchant
.mm ,. r, uui pians were lacking or' r.ctive against the same products in "" ' wnuiq nave this republic
courage failed. The unprepared- passing to the consumer. Contem- thfi 'e'lns maritime nation of the
than unpreparedness for war. dividual farmer to meet the organized
we can nrnm i. -. . , . l,b .1 .. ...... . 1 .
... ,,,, ..l( l.-irie.iv I'lll'-l r ... inn i ..'.'' noil in' ll.- --
...l.nU .11 ..... ...... ... ... .. - a
proportions, but we do pledge that ! buys. I hold that farmers should not I believe ln a small army, but the)
ustent attack which i only be permitted hut encouraged to ",r"' 1,1 ln worm, witn a mindfulness
r-M . . ! , . .. ,H n , . 1 .. for nrenaredneeno whHfh u.ni , .
wi um me;
world.
I believe In a navy ample to pro
tect It, and able to assure us depend-
.r.in in ..,.....11,.. iu.1. iinn. . . for p r ipn red nees whlrh
reap the Just measure of reward mr. unutterable cost of our previous neg-
ted by their arduous toil. T,et us
facilitate co-operation to Insure 1 believe in our eminence In trad,
aeainsf the risks attending agrirul- broad, which the government should
lure, which the urban world so little m rxpanning, noth In raveallng
understands, and a like cn-nperatlon markets and speeding cargoes.
. ""L "r 'l' 'IHP 111. II
earnest and consistent attack which
the party platform covenants. We
I will attempt Intelligent and cour
ageous deflation, and strike nt (Gov
ernment borrnwdng which enlarges
the evil, and we will attack high cost
of government with every energy and
fArlll.v ia, kink ...! n L. I I
1 11 n.ii.n r 'I'll ini.'Hn ca-, iiii.ihihiiiji., .inn n HRr .0 -.. p.-rn 1 1.111
l-inn y. r piorinw inai rener wmcn ro marsei rneir prouijcrn as nirecuy ' -".uiunmia souiciarns
will attend the halting of waste and as nosslble with the consumer. In the for Immigration, which art concerned
xtravagance, and the renewal of the i Interests of us all t'pon such assorla- wl'h 'he future citizenship of the, re
, practlre of public economy, not alone tion and co-operation should he laid Public, not with mere man-power In
because It will relieve tax burdens only such restrictions as will pre- industry.
hut because It will be an example to vent arbitrary control of our food ' I believe that every man who dons
' stimulate thrift and economy In pri-, supply and the fixing of extortionate ?ne Krb ef American citizenship and
j vate life. 1 pr!c upon It. walks In the light of American op-
I I have already alluded to the ne- ' Our n'atform is nn earnest pledge
cessity for the fullness of production, i of renewed concern for this most es-j ( CfVJCTIKXTED ON PAGE ITOT.)
I believe In establishing standards
i
is,-.-
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